What Do You Really Need? - 09/26/18 02:41 PM
I remember a time when my computer had trouble keeping up with my keyboarding speed and I would sometimes have to slowdown to give the computer time to catch up. Those days are long gone as are the computers I was using and truthfully they're not missed. The amazing things that I can do with my Apple devices today benefit greatly from the improved engineering and hardware that is an order of magnitude or two faster in fact without that speed they wouldn't be practical. But two things have cropped up lately that has caused me to question the ever greater demand for speed.
First I have had multiple request from friends and relatives for advice on purchasing a new Mac, or iPhone, or iPad, or watch. When I asked those Friends and relatives how they use their computer/ iPhone/ iPad/ watch the answers are amazingly alike, "I checked my email and messages, Cruise the Internet, write an occasional letter, and (rarely) balance my checkbook." My next question is, "… and what are you looking for in your new Computer/ phone/ pad?" Hear the answer is almost universally the same, "well of course speed…".
Second, are the recent reviews on the new iPhone XS criticizing Apple because they claim a 15% speed improvement and various benchmark tests are showing 13% speed improvement. (I am going to ignore the fact those benchmarks are accurate measurements under laboratory conditions, and do not accurately reflect "Real world" usage and perceptions.)
Admittedly so many of those "gee whiz" features in our operating systems and software that we love (such as dictation which I am using to create this post) work as well as they do because the hardware has gotten fast enough to support the necessary processing in a realistic time, but how fast do our devices have to be for checking our email, browsing the Internet, and writing the occasional letter? In point fact one of the major limiting factors is how fast we type, and that has been true for at least a couple of generations.
One of my friends who was asking Computer purchasing advice was trying to decide between the MacBook and a MacBook Pro. He likes the size, transportability, and price of the MacBook (so do I). His concern about the Macbook is," is it fast enough to do the job?" "Fast enough to do the job"? — the most demanding tasks that my friend put his computer to would be watching the latest Star Wars movie. A larger screen might be nice in that case, but the other evening my wife and her girl friends over for Bridge so I was relegated to the back room and a 4 inch rainstorm had put a satellite television out of commission and "Solo" including the dramatic audio was quite enjoyable on my 11" iPad Pro. (I think the sound is better on the iPad Pro than it is on my MacBook Pro.)
My point in this rant is we all (and I am including myself) get to enamored of the "ever faster" CPU/GPU/SSD syndrome. Most of us, could easily get by with a lot less computer "horsepower" than we think we have to have. If we step back and take a serious look at what we do with our computers how many of us are making purchasing decisions based on "bragging rights" rather than actual task requirements?
CONFESSION:
My son just bought a MacBook (I encouraged him to wait for the new ones but patience is not one of his virtues). This presented me with the opportunity to try it out the MacBook alongside my MacBook Pro.
CONCLUSION: if I had the Mac book first I would've been perfectly content with it's speed, performance, and features. However, having had the MacBook Pro first I found not so much my requirements but my "I really want that" list had evolved and some of the features on the MacBook Pro I had initially pretty much ignored had become essential really nice to have. Specifically the touch bar. Now I wouldn't want to do without it. The next feature I would like to see on my MacBook Pro his facial recognition.
First I have had multiple request from friends and relatives for advice on purchasing a new Mac, or iPhone, or iPad, or watch. When I asked those Friends and relatives how they use their computer/ iPhone/ iPad/ watch the answers are amazingly alike, "I checked my email and messages, Cruise the Internet, write an occasional letter, and (rarely) balance my checkbook." My next question is, "… and what are you looking for in your new Computer/ phone/ pad?" Hear the answer is almost universally the same, "well of course speed…".
Second, are the recent reviews on the new iPhone XS criticizing Apple because they claim a 15% speed improvement and various benchmark tests are showing 13% speed improvement. (I am going to ignore the fact those benchmarks are accurate measurements under laboratory conditions, and do not accurately reflect "Real world" usage and perceptions.)
Admittedly so many of those "gee whiz" features in our operating systems and software that we love (such as dictation which I am using to create this post) work as well as they do because the hardware has gotten fast enough to support the necessary processing in a realistic time, but how fast do our devices have to be for checking our email, browsing the Internet, and writing the occasional letter? In point fact one of the major limiting factors is how fast we type, and that has been true for at least a couple of generations.
One of my friends who was asking Computer purchasing advice was trying to decide between the MacBook and a MacBook Pro. He likes the size, transportability, and price of the MacBook (so do I). His concern about the Macbook is," is it fast enough to do the job?" "Fast enough to do the job"? — the most demanding tasks that my friend put his computer to would be watching the latest Star Wars movie. A larger screen might be nice in that case, but the other evening my wife and her girl friends over for Bridge so I was relegated to the back room and a 4 inch rainstorm had put a satellite television out of commission and "Solo" including the dramatic audio was quite enjoyable on my 11" iPad Pro. (I think the sound is better on the iPad Pro than it is on my MacBook Pro.)
My point in this rant is we all (and I am including myself) get to enamored of the "ever faster" CPU/GPU/SSD syndrome. Most of us, could easily get by with a lot less computer "horsepower" than we think we have to have. If we step back and take a serious look at what we do with our computers how many of us are making purchasing decisions based on "bragging rights" rather than actual task requirements?
CONFESSION:
My son just bought a MacBook (I encouraged him to wait for the new ones but patience is not one of his virtues). This presented me with the opportunity to try it out the MacBook alongside my MacBook Pro.
CONCLUSION: if I had the Mac book first I would've been perfectly content with it's speed, performance, and features. However, having had the MacBook Pro first I found not so much my requirements but my "I really want that" list had evolved and some of the features on the MacBook Pro I had initially pretty much ignored had become essential really nice to have. Specifically the touch bar. Now I wouldn't want to do without it. The next feature I would like to see on my MacBook Pro his facial recognition.